Below are brief summaries of notable measures the Utah House voted on Feb. 14 that were recorded with final outcomes on the floor. Items listed had limited floor debate or were placed on the consent calendar.
- First substitute House Bill 3 94 — Statutory intent amendments: Passed 71-0. Sponsor described it as a technical cleanup removing legislative-intent language from operative statute. Transmitted to the Senate for consideration.
- First substitute House Bill 4 59 — Appropriations subcommittee amendments: Passed 68-0. Sponsor said bill updates subcommittee names and coordinates reporting clauses with other legislation; sent to the Senate.
- First substitute House Bill 76 — Public education revisions: Passed 71-0. The substitute removed the word "accredited" from a kindergarten-enrollment provision and added several education code clarifications; sent to the Senate.
- Fourth substitute House Bill 104 — Firearm safety in schools: Passed 59-10 (see separate article for debate and amendment details).
- First substitute House Bill 219 — Charter school funding revisions: Passed 70-0. Sponsor described a plan to use a $4 million fund to support charter school bond financing and refinancing, with projected interest savings of $3–4 million per year for schools that qualify.
- First substitute House Bill 2 72 — Vehicle assessment amendments: Passed 73-0. The bill aligns Utah's weight cutoff for classification with the federal class-3 truck standard by changing the threshold from 12,000 to 14,000 pounds and applies age-based uniform rates accordingly.
- Second substitute House Bill 302 — Minors in state custody amendments: Passed (final tally recorded on floor as 72-0); creates secure accounts for survivor benefits for children who have lost both parents and directs the Department of Health and Human Services to seek a Medicaid waiver.
- Second substitute House Bill 3 26 — Pregnant and postpartum inmate amendments: Passed 71-0. Bill requires jails to offer pregnancy testing to women incarcerated longer than 72 hours and extends an advisory group's charge through 2027.
- Fourth substitute House Bill 3 32 — Voter registration data amendments: Passed 59-13 (see separate article for extended debate and amendment attempts).
These items will be transmitted or were transmitted to the Senate as appropriate. For bills with extensive debate or substantive amendments, see the dedicated articles in this package for fuller context.